Yorkshire Post

PART OF THE FURNITURE

DFS sees profits tumble in a weak market but notes signs of recovery

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ROS SNOWDON CITY EDITOR ■ Email: ros.snowdon@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @RosSnowdon­YPN It’s a shame as the first nine months of the year was ahead of plan. Ian Filby, chief executive of DFS Furniture

SOFA SPECIALIST DFS Furniture has reported a steep fall in annual profits and said it expects the market to remain subdued as a result of political risk and weak consumer sentiment.

The Doncaster-based firm said pre-tax profit fell 48.5 per cent to £25.8m in the year to July 28 after the summer heatwave hit sales in the fourth quarter.

Underlying pre-tax profit before brand amortisati­on fell 23.7 per cent to £38.3m.

The group’s chief executive Ian Filby said: “Financial results for the year reflected the exceptiona­l downturn in market demand we saw in the fourth quarter.

“We are pleased to note that the market has recovered since the start of the new financial year, with the group seeing likefor-like order growth across all brands over the first nine weeks.

“We believe, however, we are benefiting from deferred purchases in the prior financial year and overall we expect the market to remain subdued into 2019, constraine­d by political risk and weak consumer sentiment.”

Talking about the Brexit outcome, he said the group is well prepared for all eventualit­ies.

“We encourage a situation where our borders remain as frictionle­ss as possible,” he said.

“We are well prepared. We don’t have a perishable product life so a couple of days’ delay would not be significan­t.”

He said it was encouragin­g to see sales pick up in August and September.

“It’s always pleasing when what you anticipate happens. The hottest summer since 1976 saw people opting for barbecues, beaches and parks rather than retail parks,” he said.

“It’s a shame as the first nine months of the year was ahead of plan. The logic is a bounce back – which we have experience­d.”

He said the group is well positioned to become stronger in the current environmen­t, boosted by investment and acquisitio­n benefits.

“We have excellent prospects for profitable growth and attractive cash flow generation over the longer term,” he added.

Revenue fell 2 per cent to £747.7m over the year after stripping out the benefit of acquisitio­ns.

Group revenue including acquisitio­ns, such as Sofology, rose 14.1 per cent to £870.5m, while online sales jumped 15.1 per cent.

Mr Filby said: “We are by far the market leader in online and we are close to a market share of 30 per cent.”

Over the last week the group has launched an Augmented Reality service that allows customers to walk into a room in their home and places a sofa of their choice in that room via their Apple iOS iPhones or iPads.

The feature is on the DFS.co.uk website, meaning that customers don’t need to download an app, they can just use the function straight from the website.

Ed Monk, associate director at Fidelity Personal Investing’s share dealing service, said: “As a market leader DFS is wellplaced to capitalise in a disrupted market and recent acquisitio­ns should improve trading fundamenta­ls.

“Today’s results show investors may have to be patient.”

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 ??  ?? MARKET FORCES: Ian Filby, the chief executive of DFS, said despite the profits plunge it was encouragin­g to sees a sales pick-up in August and September.
MARKET FORCES: Ian Filby, the chief executive of DFS, said despite the profits plunge it was encouragin­g to sees a sales pick-up in August and September.

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